Intensive Care Unit, Royal Surrey County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Guildford, GU2 7XX, UK.
Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, School of Biosciences and Medicine, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK.
Trials. 2019 Jul 24;20(1):456. doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3547-5.
Forty per cent of critically ill patients are affected by intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICU-AW), to which skeletal muscle wasting makes a substantial contribution. This can impair outcomes in hospital, and can cause long-term physical disability after hospital discharge. No effective mitigating strategies have yet been identified. Application of a repetitive vascular occlusion stimulus (RVOS) a limb pressure cuff inducing brief repeated cycles of ischaemia and reperfusion, can limit disuse muscle atrophy in both healthy controls and bed-bound patients recovering from knee surgery. We wish to determine whether RVOS might be effective in mitigating against muscle wasting in the ICU. Given that RVOS can also improve vascular function in healthy controls, we also wish to assess such effects in the critically ill. We here describe a pilot study to assess whether RVOS application is safe, tolerable, feasible and acceptable for ICU patients.
This is a randomised interventional feasibility trial. Thirty-two ventilated adult ICU patients with multiorgan failure will be recruited within 48 h of admission and randomised to either the intervention arm or the control arm. Intervention participants will receive RVOS twice daily (except only once on day 1) for up to 10 days or until ICU discharge. Serious adverse events and tolerability (pain score) will be recorded; feasibility of trial procedures will be assessed against pre-specified criteria and acceptability by semi-structured interview. Together with vascular function, muscle mass and quality will be assessed using ultrasound and measures of physical function at baseline, on days 6 and 11 of study enrolment, and at ICU and hospital discharge. Blood and urine biomarkers of muscle metabolism, vascular function, inflammation and DNA damage/repair mechanism will also be analysed. The Health questionnaire will be completed 3 months after hospital discharge.
If this study demonstrates feasibility, the derived data will be used to inform the design (and sample size) of an appropriately-powered prospective trial to clarify whether RVOS can help preserve muscle mass/improve vascular function in critically ill patients.
ISRCTN Registry, ISRCTN44340629. Registered on 26 October 2017.
40%的危重症患者受到重症监护病房获得性肌无力(ICU-AW)的影响,其中骨骼肌减少对其有重要贡献。这会影响患者在医院的治疗效果,并导致患者出院后长期存在身体残疾。目前还没有确定有效的缓解策略。应用重复血管闭塞刺激(RVOS)——一种通过肢体压力袖带引起短暂重复缺血再灌注循环的方法——可以限制健康对照者和膝关节手术后卧床患者的废用性肌肉萎缩。我们希望确定 RVOS 是否可以有效预防 ICU 中的肌肉减少。鉴于 RVOS 还可以改善健康对照者的血管功能,我们还希望评估其在危重症患者中的作用。在此,我们描述了一项初步研究,以评估 RVOS 应用对 ICU 患者是否安全、耐受、可行和可接受。
这是一项随机干预性可行性试验。将在入院后 48 小时内招募 32 名接受机械通气的成年 ICU 多器官衰竭患者,并随机分为干预组或对照组。干预组将每天接受 RVOS 治疗两次(第 1 天仅接受一次),最多 10 天或直至 ICU 出院。将记录严重不良事件和耐受性(疼痛评分);根据预先指定的标准评估试验程序的可行性,并通过半结构化访谈评估可接受性。同时,使用超声评估肌肉质量和质量、血管功能,并在研究入组第 6 天和第 11 天以及 ICU 和出院时评估身体功能。还将分析肌肉代谢、血管功能、炎症和 DNA 损伤/修复机制的血液和尿液生物标志物。出院后 3 个月完成健康问卷。
如果这项研究证明具有可行性,那么所获得的数据将用于为一项适当规模的前瞻性试验提供信息,以明确 RVOS 是否可以帮助危重症患者保持肌肉量/改善血管功能。
ISRCTN 注册处,ISRCTN44340629。于 2017 年 10 月 26 日注册。